Welcome back to Haul of Fame, your must-read beauty roundup for new products, new ideas and an intriguing argument for Hedi Slimane at Chanel. (Hint: lipstick.)
Included in todayâs issue: Credo Beauty, Cyklar, Evolvetogether, Finneas, Glossier, Lionel Messi, Mooncat, Mustela, Oak Essentials, Oribe, Prequel, Ralph Lauren, Roblox, Smashbox Cosmetics, Solawave, Topicals, and Twinkies.
But firstâ¦
In August, Rare Beauty launched a lip and cheek duo tied to âOnly Murders in the Buildingâ and its winsome leading lady, Mabel Mora, played by Rareâs founder, Selena Gomez. âOnly Murdersâ is the rare TV comedy thatâs actually funny. âOnly Murdersâ is the rare TV comedy thatâs actually funny. Itâs also focused on Jane Lynch getting shot in the heart, then thrown into an incinerator so her body turns to dust. Should that sell beauty products? No. And yet, Rareâs gift set sold out in three days.
âOnly Murdersâ is fictional, but the true crime genre that dominates podcast charts and Netflix documentaries is also a stealth beauty converter. Thatâs most obvious on the YouTube channel Murder Mystery and Makeup, which follows a simple formula: Beauty influencer Bailey Sarian applies MAC eyeliner and Haus Labs blush into the camera while talking about serial killers, sexual predators, and secret cannibals. Sarian has nearly 7.5 million subscribers on YouTube alone and is successful enough as a content creator that sheâs signed to WME, the same mega-agency that reps Gomez herself.
When a reporter asks how youâre making cold hard cash from cold-blooded violence, the smartest thing to do is ignore her interview requests â which Sarian did. (Cue âJurassic Parkâ voice: Clever girl.) So I rang up Dr. Honor Doro Townshend, a criminologist in London who studies the public fascination with true crime.
âFrom a brand perspective, I see why beauty companies link to true crime content,â she said. Townshend explains that ultimately, true crime content is considered entertainment by its fans. âWe might not talk about deriving pleasure from the experience of true crime, but that is part of it.â True crime content has also been found to promote feelings of security and self-awareness, two intended byproducts of cosmetic application.
And while some brands use Halloween to tread into gorier territory â perhaps as a plausible shield of deniability for anyone objecting to the tactic â others have used darkness in evergreen marketing. Makeup brand Rituel de Fille has a vein-matching lipstick called Written in Blood that featured in ads for season nine of âAmerican Horror Story.â Urban Decayâs original 1990s lip colour âGashâ is also still going strong, along with a gunmetal shade called âUzi.â Black Moon cosmetics sells lipsticks in tiny coffin carriers, and has hue names like âElm Street,â âHellraiser,â âOmen,â and âDracula.â The perfumer Kilian has a $295 Black Phantom fragrance that claims notes of cyanide (!) and TokyoMilk made an Arsenic scent in the mid-2010s that remains a top seller on resale sites. Thereâs even an entire Florida-based brand called âMakeup a Murderâ that sells $20 glitter palettes inspired by various crime scenes, alongside knife-shaped lip glosses. And CrimeCon, the gathering of wannabe CSI directors that Gomez herself has attended, sells a $10 cosmetics bag with an âI Know Thingsâ graphic.
Is this a scary smart move on behalf of brands? âItâs clearly working, but itâs odd!â said Townshend with a laugh. âBut, you know, listening to true crime stories can be a form of self-soothing behaviour. Makeup application is another way that some people self-soothe.â The link between beauty and death can also manifest in many peopleâs obsession with their own mortality. Looking âmore youthfulâ can help us pretend weâre not inevitably going to die. Likewise, listening to stories of someone elseâs demise can reassure us that weâre still among the livingâand that we have the power to help stop killers, and therefore help prevent death. In that way, said Townshend, the leap between applying blush and obsessing over a strangerâs murder âisnât as big a cognitive switch as you think.â
What Else Is New
Skincare
In 2004, Gwyneth Paltrow showed up for the âAnchormanâ premiere in a strapless dress that revealed bruises from a spa cupping treatment. (Classic!) On Oct. 16, the influencer and Finneas video star Claudia Sulewski debuted a $20 âbody toning cupâ as part of her Cyklar beauty line, which also includes a $35 âsensory cleanserâ and $29 body cream. I cannot wait to debut my own pooled blood marks under an Isabel Marant strapless dress this weekend. Goop vibes, undefeated.
Oak Essentials premiered its Nourishing Cleansing Milk on Oct. 15. Itâs $45 and makes a fascinating claim: Apparently, this stuff âcounters the effects of hard water.â Honestly, I love that a liquid soap is coming for the booming (and landfill-loading) shower head market, and this wonât be the last time we see that kind of messaging in a cleanser this season. Stay tuned.
Solawaveâs LightBoost Topicals line dropped on Oct. 16, with four productsâa face serum, a neck serum, a moisturiser, and an eye creamâthat claim to work alone and enhance the results of SolaWaveâs âlight therapyâ gizmos. They cost $38 to $56 each.
Prequelâs Gleanser + SA, a face wash with 1 percent salicylic acid, dropped on Oct. 15. Itâs spelt with a âgâ because of glycerine, which features heavily in its $20 formula, and aims to tackle the delicate balance between zapping zits and keeping the face moisturised.
Credo Beauty now stocks three deodorants from Evolvetogether. They hit shelves on Oct. 15.
Itâs a big week for Thea Green, the beauty founder whose Nails.Inc and Holler & Glow brands just got acquired by the Pacific World Corporation. Thatâs cool, but the âyippee!â moment for shoppers might be with Greenâs other brand, Inc.redible. On Oct. 14, it dropped a collab with Twinkies and Pop Tarts. The merch includes âfrostedâ strawberry and vanilla body washes, plus tiny sponges that look like snacks. The Twinkies one is particularly fun.
Makeup
Celineâs first lipstick, a satin red shade called Rouge Triomphe, hit shelves on Oct. 15. Itâs $75 and claims to be the brainchild of Hedi Slimane, marking the designerâs first public steps into franchised colour cosmetics. If Slimane ends up at a mega-luxury brand like Chanel, he might needâor wantâto be more involved in its beauty business, especially since it accounts for so much brand revenue. This lipstick is particularly good, formula-wise. Itâs also a built-in vehicle for Slimane to prove he can lead a fashion brand thatâs also a beauty company.
On Oct. 15, KJH.brand introduced Soft Smudge Lip & Cheek stick, which costs $24 and promises âthe longevity of a powder with the effortless application of a cream product.â
Glossier brought back its Cookie Butter, Espresso, and Biscotti lip butters for the holiday season; you can get them as singles or part of a little ornament duo. Adorbs.
Isamaya Beauty has three new shades of Liplacq 2.0 serum, including Ultraviolet, Beetle, and Lotus. Theyâre basically shimmery lip glosses and cost $38 each.
On Oct. 13, Smashbox Cosmetics unveiled FlashFX lipstick in shimmer-infused red shades. Theyâre limited-edition holiday colours and cost $22 each.
Mooncatâs Pandora Unboxed collection hexed itself into existence on Oct. 18. It includes four shades including Green Eyed Monster, which glows in the dark and costs $15.
Haircare
If you would rather pay $$$ than gift wrap anything yourself, Oribe is your friend. On Oct. 10, it launched six gift sets with vibrant packaging by the Kenyan artist Thandiwe Muriu. At $50 to $295, the boxes are costly. But if you get night sweats thinking about scotch tape and corner-edge folding, perhaps the value here is undeniable.
Mustelaâs Detangling & Nourishing Cream Shampoo dropped Oct. 18 on Amazon. Itâs $14 and made for children with tighter curls and tangle-prone hair, although the kid in the âbeforeâ and âafterâ pics looks perfect both ways!
On Oct. 15, Nutrafol introduced Active Cleanse, a 2-in-1 shampoo and conditioner formulated for men. Why the gender designation? The brand says itâs because âmen have a weaker scalp barrierâ that needs some extra care. This care specifically costs $44.
Fragrance
Do you want to smell like Lionel Messi? His eponymous cologne hit JCPenney on Oct. 9 with notes of cardamom, cyprus, and vanilla. The fragrance is distributed by Sheralven, whose CEO Steven Koss says, âWe are confident that with Messiâs devoted fan base, we will hit the projected retail sales of $100M by 2026.â BRB, setting a calendar alert to check back in 14 monthsâ¦
More in athletic smells: Lewis Hamilton is famously a Tom Ford dude, but his fellow F1 driver Lando Norris is the newest face of Ralph Lauren Fragrances. On Oct. 15, he debuted as Polo Redâs new campaign model, wearing a red racing suit and clutching a bottle of cologne in the ad pic.
Rather smell like an extremely talented and perpetually underrated Disney star? Ashley Tisdaleâs fragrance line, Being Frenshe, dropped a $15 scent called Moon Milk on Oct. 15. It has notes of orange, nutmeg, bergamot, cardamom, cinnamon bark, warm oat milk, and vanilla. If you donât want to mist yourself with it, try ordering that flavour combo at Starbucks. Sounds amazing.
Fineâry is âthe fastest-growing fragrance brand at Target,â according to Fineâry. On Oct. 15, they unveiled a new Roblox space that combines super-soothing chime music with giant computerised bottles. Itâs cute!
And Finally
Did you peep the Topicals under-eye masks backstage at the Victoriaâs Secret show? VS doesnât sell the brand⦠but gosh, what if they did?